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originally posted by: Greathouse
Would the EMP effect be increased if the radio was both plugged in and on? The radio could be plugged in but no power would be reaching the tubes because they event close the circuit until the armed switch is turned on.
One last question please. I thought a really strong EMP could damage copper transmission lines?
Is that true or just a urban legend?
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: Greathouse
Would the EMP effect be increased if the radio was both plugged in and on? The radio could be plugged in but no power would be reaching the tubes because they event close the circuit until the armed switch is turned on.
With EMP, you get two major effects. One, you get a prompt RF burst that can take out the front ends of receivers and miscellaneous logic gates by inducing high voltages on antennae and long PCB traces. It'll induce high voltages on power lines as well, although they're somewhat protected against it. You will lose your front end caps, possibly cause dV/dt insulation faliure on front end inductors.
The second is a geomagnetic heave. The heave component induces currents in long lines, like power lines. You'll lose transmission lines and power distribution systems to the heave, since it'll walk power transformers up and off their BH curves into the land of saturation where no power transformer should go. At that point, they become short circuits instead of transformers, and burn up.
The heave will also fry up your power transformer, if the design's got one, and it'll pop your filter caps and diodes if not.
So not plugged in, or very heavily protected if so are good ideas.
One last question please. I thought a really strong EMP could damage copper transmission lines?
Is that true or just a urban legend?
It's the heave that does in the long lines. But it's possible to rig them to be ok with it. We just don't, because $$$.
originally posted by: Greathouse
So basically you're telling the OP the tubes will be fine. The rest of the radio might be screwed up but his vacuum tubes should be fine. (if it's plugged in)
originally posted by: AreUKiddingMe
a reply to: bluemooone2
a reply to: bluemooone2
It's a great hobby and the electronics are pretty simple for anyone who is inclined. This pic is the chassis when I first took it out of the cabinet for repair. The tuning mechanism is at the very bottom of the pic, it's called a variable capacitor. Two sets of rows of metal plates that mesh together when you tune the radio but don't touch each other.
originally posted by: paradoxious
A microwave oven's usefulness as a Faraday cage will depend much upon the frequencies you're shielding against.
But... I just did a double test: cell phone in MW using BT earpiece. Called cell from house phone, took about 3 rings before the cell started ringing AND was able to answer and talk with the BT earpiece. So, MW as a cage for cell phones doesn't work so good.
Edit- BT frequency is ~2.4GHz. Cell phone frequency to tower is ~900 MHz.